Mama gives us quick hugs when we arrive, then rushes upstairs to get back on grandma duty. Alessia has never been sensitive, so I’m not surprised she isn’t trying to help Mama during her time of need. I hope, at some point, she’ll start considering others’ feelings and needs before her own. I know better than anyone how important fitness is, but I haven’t done my morning yoga in weeks, and I go for a jog when I can. She’s not a child anymore. She can’t stay in the pool all day while Mama takes care of everything. What will she do when Mama’s gone? Instead of dumping the responsibility on her, she needs to learn how to do motherhood and get those trade secrets from an OG while she can.
Since Desiree hadn’t met her cousins yet, and the point of this visit is to spend time with Mama, I take her upstairs to get acquainted. She doesn’t know who they are or what she’s doing in this house, but she seems to enjoy the coos and babbles from the other babies. Breanna is chilling on the play mat, so I set Desi in the empty crib, and for once she doesn’t fight or cry. She actually smiles. Is she communicating with her cousins? Perhaps this is the beginning of a beautiful alliance. Mama asks me to watch them for a few moments while she tends the garden, so of course I agree. There’s an odd calm in the room. I don’t think I’ve ever been around when all three triplets were satisfied. Grandmas are so magical, I tell ya. I take a moment and gaze at them. Just like Des, they are getting too big too fast. Bre and Arvin might look like their no-good daddy, but they sure are beautiful. Lex is Alessia’s mini me. Did she name him that because it sounds like her name?
We didn’t eat breakfast because I wanted to get to the house as soon as possible, so I go downstairs to put something on the grill. I don’t know why, but I’ve been really into the grill lately. Maybe that whole man and fire thing has some truth in it. Mama had changed her clothes and hadn’t made it to the garden yet, so we walk downstairs together. Well, I go down first and she follows, rather; she’s a lot slower these days. As I head out the door, I tell her I’m going to put something on the grill. “Okay. I love you,” she says. There’s something a little extra warm and fuzzy in that one. Even though she says it all the time, it seems kind of odd for her to throw that in there, so I turn around to say it back. I expect to see her shining face, instead, I see the life oozing out of her.
I stand there for a moment, shocked by my mother’s lifeless body on the floor. I did not see that one coming. Like, at all. I’m not ready! Why did it have to happen so soon?! I mean, I know “soon” is a construct of my own mind, and it’s just her time, but still! Seeing that hurt. It really really hurts.
“LESS!!!”
The grim reaper shows up, looking like we interrupted his beach vacation or something, and I beg him to give her more time because she has four young grandchildren, and she is a full-time caretaker of three of them. My sister needs her. I plead. I implore. I grovel. When I’m out of reasons for him to revive her, he pulls out his tablet and scrolls through the names, taps on her profile when he sees it, and reads the details of her life. It must be an interesting read because he lets out a “hmmm” now and then, giving me hope he finds something that will convince him not to take her away.
“She’s had quite a life,” he said, making me even more hopeful. “But my hands are tied. She has no unfinished business. It’s her time to go, dude.”
Less finally comes in from outside as he tells me this, looking every bit as shocked as me. Sophia starts bawling immediately.
“Sorry for your loss, folks,” the reaper says. “Now, if you would excuse me.”
He gently side steps us, inching towards Mama’s body, and a panic runs through me. I can’t watch this. I can’t watch him take away my mom’s soul, so I rush to the living room to let him destroy what’s left of our family.